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Prediction of Clinical Coronary Heart Disease by a Test for the Coronary-Prone Behavior Pattern

List of authors.
  • C. David Jenkins, Ph.D.,
  • Ray H. Rosenman, M.D.,
  • and Stephen J. Zyzanski, Ph.D.

Abstract

Prospective study of 2750 employed men who completed a computer-scored test questionnaire measuring the coronary-prone Type A behavior pattern showed that high scorers had twice the incidence of new coronary heart disease as low scorers over a four-year period. Subjects with different initial clinical manifestations of coronary disease did not differ from one another in their Type A test scores. The double-blind design of these studies and the orderly relation of Type A scores to coronary-disease risk suggest that the coronary-prone behavior pattern is prospectively linked to the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease. The findings also indicate that the test questionnaire used is a valid means of measuring some of the ways in which behavior contributes to coronary risk. (N Engl J Med 290:1271–1275, 1974)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by research grants (HL-15399 and HL-03429) from the National Heart and Lung Institute, National Institutes of Health, and by funds from the Irwin Strasburger Memorial Medical Foundation of New York.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Behavioral Epidemiology, Boston University School of Medicine, and the Harold Brunn Institute, Mount Zion Hospital and Medical Center, San Francisco, Cal. (address reprint requests to Dr. Jenkins at the Department of Behavioral Epidemiology, Division of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, 720 Harrison Ave., Boston, Mass. 02118).

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